VerbalReading Comprehension

Free GMAT Reading Comprehension Practice Question

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When several cities eliminated rules requiring new apartment buildings near rail stations to include a minimum number of parking spaces, researchers tracked the households that subsequently moved into those buildings. Compared with residents of otherwise similar buildings still subject to the old parking mandates, the new residents owned roughly forty percent fewer cars. Commentators seized on the gap as direct evidence that parking mandates themselves cause car dependence: build the spaces, the argument runs, and people will fill them. Repeal the mandates, and car ownership falls.

That inference, however attractive, outpaces what the data establish. The buildings were not assigned to households at random. People who already prefer to live without a car, or who expect to, are precisely the ones most likely to seek out an apartment that does not bundle an expensive parking space into the rent. A building that omits parking therefore attracts the car-averse, and the resulting low ownership reflects, in part, who chose to move in rather than what the policy did to them after they arrived. The forty percent gap conflates the effect of the rule with the preferences of the residents it selects.

None of this means the mandates are harmless. Even after one accounts for such sorting, a portion of the difference probably does trace to the policy itself, since a household that finds parking inconvenient and costly may gradually drive less and eventually shed a vehicle it once considered essential. The defensible claim is narrower than the headline: repealing parking mandates likely reduces car ownership somewhat, chiefly among residents already inclined toward that choice, rather than transforming the driving habits of the general population. Policymakers who expect the larger result may be disappointed, but those who treat the smaller one as worthless would discard a real, if modest, effect.

Which of the following best describes the organization of the passage?

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Answer & Explanation

Correct answer

A

The passage moves through three structural stages. Paragraph one presents a finding (residents of buildings freed from parking minimums 'owned roughly forty percent fewer cars') together with the sweeping conclusion others drew from it ('Commentators seized on the gap as direct evidence that parking mandates themselves cause car dependence'). Paragraph two faults that conclusion: 'That inference, however attractive, outpaces what the data establish,' because 'The buildings were not assigned to households at random' and the car-averse self-select into parking-free apartments, so 'The forty percent gap conflates the effect of the rule with the preferences of the residents it selects.' Paragraph three endorses a narrower claim: 'None of this means the mandates are harmless,' and 'The defensible claim is narrower than the headline: repealing parking mandates likely reduces car ownership somewhat, chiefly among residents already inclined toward that choice.'

Choice (A) captures all three moves in order: finding plus broad conclusion, then a critique aimed at who chose the housing, then endorsement of a more limited claim. (B) inverts the order (criticism first) and wrongly says the claim is reaffirmed unchanged. (C) wrongly has the author endorsing the broad conclusion and recommending action, when the author challenges it and only qualifies it. (D) invents two competing studies and a methods comparison that the passage never contains. (E) overstates the critique as showing the conclusion 'establishes nothing,' contradicting the author's statement that part of the gap 'probably does trace to the policy itself' and the warning against treating the effect as 'worthless.'